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To: SPSEIFERT who wrote (10982)10/21/2003 8:19:47 PM
From: jackhach  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 13797
 
>>to think about what is being said. there are a lot of fed up people like me who want to run their own lives<<

...is this what you mean? Do you think Jeb and the Florida GOP should keep their hands out of other people's lives?

Gov. Bush restores 13 year effort to save brain-damaged woman. Judge to weigh injunction against reinserting feeding tube Tuesday, October 21, 2003 Posted: 8:11 PM EDT (0011 GMT)

TALLAHASSEE, Florida (CNN) -- Florida Gov. Jeb Bush ordered a feeding tube reinserted into a brain-damaged woman Tuesday afternoon, less than two hours after the Legislature passed a bill allowing him to do so.

Florida lawmakers gave Bush the authority in an effort to keep Terri Schiavo alive nearly a week after the tube was removed at the request of her husband, Michael, effectively overturning a court ruling that she be allowed to die.

"Like the tens of thousands of Floridians who have raised their voices in support of Terri Schiavo's right to live, I have been deeply moved by these tragic circumstances," Bush said in a statement issued after he signed the bill. "My thoughts and prayers remain with Terri and those who love her."

Michael Schiavo's lawyers filed an emergency injunction Tuesday evening to prevent the re-feeding of his wife. A Pinellas Circuit Court judge has agreed to hear arguments at 8:30 p.m.

Schiavo's attorneys argue that the bill authorizing Bush to reinstate the tube is unconstitutional.

"It violates the separation of powers between the judicial and executive branches," attorney Debbie Bushnell said.

Earlier Tuesday, a judge in Clearwater refused to issue a temporary restraining order that Michael Schiavo's attorneys had sought, saying the filing was made in the wrong jurisdiction.

Schiavo is being cared for at a hospice in Pinellas Park. She was moved Tuesday evening to a hospital in Clearwater, where she will be rehydrated intravenously in preparation for reinsertion of the feeding tube, which will not happen immediately.

The state Senate voted 23-15 on Tuesday to approve a measure allowing Bush to issue the one-time order. The tube was removed after a lengthy court battle between Terri Schiavo's husband, Michael, and her parents, Bob and Mary Schindler.

The bill also allows a judge to appoint an independent guardian for Schiavo, taking away guardianship from her husband.

Outside the hospice in Pinellas Park, the crowd cheered and embraced after learning of Bush's signature.

"I don't know what to say," said Bob Schindler. "I thank the governor, I thank everybody in the Legislature. There's a lot of people up there who pulled together. It's just incredible, totally incredible.

"We've had a roller coaster ride. Hopefully, that's over now."

By a vote of 68-23, the GOP-controlled Florida House approved the bill late Monday.

The Schindlers had been publicly pressing Bush to intervene. He had expressed sympathy for their position but said he did not have the authority to countermand court orders allowing the tube to be removed.

Terry Schiavo, 39, has been in what doctors call a persistent vegetative state since suffering heart failure in 1990. Doctors said she is responsive but shows no significant cognitive ability, and that she was left in that condition when her heart failure cut the flow of oxygen to her brain, leaving it damaged.

Schiavo is not terminally ill, but because of her condition, she cannot feed herself, so the feeding tube provides her with nutrition and water.

She left no written instructions about her wishes should she be incapacitated, but Michael Schiavo said she made it clear before her collapse that she did not want to be sustained with life support.

"Some people do not agree with the decision the court made to remove this feeding tube. I struggle to accept it myself," Schiavo said in a statement late Monday. "But I know in my heart that it is right, and it is what Terri wants. There is no longer any realistic hope of Terri's recovery."

Her parents dispute that contention, insisting that despite her medical condition, she still responds to them and could improve with rehabilitative care.

Michael Schiavo collected more than $1 million in malpractice settlements stemming from his wife's collapse, but only about $50,000 of that settlement remains. The money has been frozen by the court.

-JH



To: SPSEIFERT who wrote (10982)10/21/2003 8:30:25 PM
From: jackhach  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 13797
 
But Sen. Rick Santorum, R-Pennsylvania, chief sponsor of the bill, said the procedure was both inhumane and unnecessary. "We can't allow this kind of brutality to corrupt us. It makes a much more brutal and harsher country if we stand here and say, yes, for whatever reason, we are going to allow this to occur."
---

I agree in full with Rick!

Capital Punishment is both inhumane and unnecessary.

-JH



To: SPSEIFERT who wrote (10982)10/22/2003 9:00:26 AM
From: Greg h2o  Respond to of 13797
 
<<Believe me I came from toughter backgrounds than any of the politicians running for office and both you and Zagorin>>
i'm not sure about bob's background. mine was never what i would consider "difficult"...just didn't have some of the benefits my son has. my main point is that it's very difficult to judge one's character by the socio-economic class in which he/she was raised. i just find it funny when people like edwards use the "i was raised a poor black child" routine. he thinks HIS parents got no respect? uh, right.